In this paper we explore how so-called ‘social media’ such as Facebook challenge Marxist organization studies. We argue that understanding the role of user activity in web 2.0 business models requires a focus on ‘work’, understood as value productive activity, that takes place beyond waged labour in the firm. A reading of Marx on the socialization of labour highlights the emerging figure of ‘free labour’, which is both unpaid and uncoerced. Marxist work on the production of the ‘audience commodity’ provides one avenue for understanding the production of content and data by users as free labour, but this raises questions concerning the distinction between productive and unproductive labour which is central to Marx’s labour theory of value. T...
Abstract: The notion of audience labour has been an important contribution to Marxist political econ...
This paper addresses the relation between capital and digital labour in the context of so-called pla...
This article examines the use of social media and the internet by employers and workers' collective ...
Abstract In this paper we explore how so-called 'social media' such as Facebook challenge ...
This piece is a short rejoinder to César Bolaño’s paper The Political Economy of the Internet and re...
This is an electronic post-print version of an article published in The Information Society (2016) 3...
On the face of its virtual and immaterial appearance, digital labour often is seen as a phenomenon o...
As Marxism has segued in and out of vogue, there is hardly a Marxian concept that has not at some ti...
So-called social media such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Weibo and LinkedIn are an expression of c...
collection of essays that emanate from the ‘Internet as Playground and Factory ’ confer-ence which t...
Since the early 2000s, the expression \u2018digital labour\u2019 has identified an influential theor...
The activities of consumers in digital media environments have increasingly been conceptualised as l...
Imagine a world full of people that own nothing but have access to everything they need because they...
This article introduces the reader to the so called ‘digital labor debate’ in the context of the pol...
This paper was presented at Paper Session 4 – Labour Processes and Subjectivities. A dominant theme ...
Abstract: The notion of audience labour has been an important contribution to Marxist political econ...
This paper addresses the relation between capital and digital labour in the context of so-called pla...
This article examines the use of social media and the internet by employers and workers' collective ...
Abstract In this paper we explore how so-called 'social media' such as Facebook challenge ...
This piece is a short rejoinder to César Bolaño’s paper The Political Economy of the Internet and re...
This is an electronic post-print version of an article published in The Information Society (2016) 3...
On the face of its virtual and immaterial appearance, digital labour often is seen as a phenomenon o...
As Marxism has segued in and out of vogue, there is hardly a Marxian concept that has not at some ti...
So-called social media such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Weibo and LinkedIn are an expression of c...
collection of essays that emanate from the ‘Internet as Playground and Factory ’ confer-ence which t...
Since the early 2000s, the expression \u2018digital labour\u2019 has identified an influential theor...
The activities of consumers in digital media environments have increasingly been conceptualised as l...
Imagine a world full of people that own nothing but have access to everything they need because they...
This article introduces the reader to the so called ‘digital labor debate’ in the context of the pol...
This paper was presented at Paper Session 4 – Labour Processes and Subjectivities. A dominant theme ...
Abstract: The notion of audience labour has been an important contribution to Marxist political econ...
This paper addresses the relation between capital and digital labour in the context of so-called pla...
This article examines the use of social media and the internet by employers and workers' collective ...